At 20 0C a water solution with a sodium chloride concentration higher than 36,09 g/100 ml is a saturated solution.
The saturation point of sodium chloride is around 26.4% by weight at room temperature. This means that a solution can only hold up to 26.4% of sodium chloride before it becomes saturated and excess salt will not dissolve.
Yes, this is the saturation point. For sodium chloride, the saturation concentration in pure water is relatively high - you can dump a lot of salt into water before it will precipitate out as a solid at the bottom of the container.
At 20 0C the maximum solubility of sodium chloride in water is 360,9 g/l.
The melting point of sodium chloride is 801 0C.
Sodium chloride is not a lubricant.
The boiling point of sodium chloride is 1 413 0C.
The boiling point of sodium chloride is 1 413 0C.
The boiling point of sodium chloride is 1 413 0C.
The melting point of sodium chloride is 801 0C.
The melting point of sodium chloride is 801 0C. The electrolysis of molten sodium chloride produce sodium and chlorine.
The melting point of sodium chloride ( NaCl ) is 801 °C, 1074 K, 1474 °F.
The melting point of sodium chloride ie 801 oC.